Endenese - Orientation
         
           Identification.                   The most popular word in the literature for the people around the         central part of Flores has been the "Endenese" or (in         Indonesian) "Orang Ende." The people who can be referred         to as "Endenese" may be divided into two groups in terms         of culture and religion. One is the coastal Endenese, who have been         under the influence of Islam. Their culture is an amalgam of traditional         features and foreign elements. The other is the mountain Endenese. It is         with these people that this cultural summary mainly deals.       
                           Location.                   The Endenese live in the central part of the island of Flores in         eastern Indonesia. The administrative division in which they reside,         Kabupaten Endeh (or Ende Regency), is located between 8° and         9° S and between 121° and 122° E. Flores is one of         the three biggest islands in Nusa Tenggara Timur (the eastern Southeast         Archipelago), Sumba and Timor being the other two. Roughly speaking, the         mountain area that runs along an east-west axis through the island         divides central Flores into two parts: the north coast and the south         coast, a division that is also pertinent to the cultural geography of         the people. Flores is located in one of the typical monsoon regions. The         wet west monsoon (with northwest wind) begins around December or January         and ends in March or April. The dry east monsoon (southeast wind) begins         in May or June and ends in October or November. The west monsoon brings         rain, which, however, rarely amounts to more than 200 centimeters         annually in the central part of Flores. The dry season is also marked by         relatively few clouds, yet in the transitional period from the west to         the east monsoon (i.e., between May and July) there are abundant clouds         (                    kubhu kuu                  ). The western part of Flores (Manggarai, Ngada) is the wettest, and the         north coast tends to be drier than the south coast. The average annual         rainfall in Endeh (on the south coast) in the years from 1879 to 1928         was 113.8 centimeters (ninety-one rainy days) and the average rainfall         in Maumere (on the north coast) in the same years was only 95.4         centimeters (sixty-seven rainy days).       
                           Demography.                   In view of the small area they occupy, the coastal Endenese are         relatively numerous, with an approximate population of 43,000. A rough         estimate of the mountain Endenese population would be 20,000.       
                           Linguistic Affiliation.                   The language of central Flores belongs to the Bima-Sumba Group of         Western Austronesian.